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Ken Pole Ottawa Perspective: Yesterday's Rules

Yesterday's Rules

Written by Ken Pole   
Dead or alive, Osama bin Laden has struck an enduring blow at western society.
Dead or alive, Osama bin Laden has struck an enduring blow at western society. I'm not referring to what's conveniently labelled ‘9/11’, but to the global fallout that has beset aviation. It's a pervasive and corrosive ash of uncertainty, fear and paranoia that is reflected graphically in a report by the Senate's national security and defence committee.

Its premise in examining “the myth of security at Canada's airports” was twofold: whether we get good value for the nearly $500 million a year we pay through our $12 trip tax (now $7) and whether the ostensibly tighter security has made travel any safer. The answer is resoundingly negative, providing food for thought even if much of it is difficult for many to swallow.

With the front door, i.e. the passenger entry, apparently closed, the committee spent more than a year hearing testimony and reading submissions about the back and side doors. As Chuck Wilmink, formerly with Canadian Airlines corporate security, told them: “The current status of airport security is not very good. I could take anyone in this room in two minutes and train you on how to put a bomb on an airplane.”